hushinoku and there is more which i dont really no sorry
The three writing systems are:KatakanaHiraganaKanjiThere is also a 4th system called Romaji, which is the romanization of Japanese, but this system is not native to Japan.
Japanese and Chinese writings are different, but in some cases use the same characters.Japanese uses different writing systems:Hirigana - Used for native Japanese wordsKatakana - Mainly used when writing foreign wordsKanji - These are characters that were borrowed from the Chinese WritingRomaji - This is used when writing Japanese characters with the Latin AlphabetChinese uses characters that they call Hanzi.Hanzi is called by different names in other countries. But in Japanese it is called Kanji.Kanji are the Chinese characters that the Japanese use along with their other writing systems (Hirigana & Katakana) . Though in Japanese one character of Kanji and represent many syllables.
hushinoku and there is more which i dont really no sorry
The Japanese use three writing systems: hiragana (cursive), katakana (print), and kanji (borrowed from the Chinese).
In Japanese, calligraphy is called shodou, or "the way of writing".
The Japanese writing system is based on Chinese writing, and is typologically an ideographic system with elements of a syllabic system. The art of Japanese writing is called calligraphy. To be precise, modern Japanese is written using three writing systems: 1. Kanji (Chinese characters) are ideographic and stand for whole words or morphemes on their own. 2. Hiragana (syllabic characters, or a syllabary similar to an alphabet) is used to spell out Kanji in pronounceable syllables, if needed, or to spell out the endings and inflections and particles used to build sentences. 3. Katakana (a second syllabary similar to hiragana) is used to spell out foreign words or in advertising; it's function is similar to italics in English. Japanese also has an official romanization called Romaji, which is a system for spelling Japanese using Roman (Latin) letters. Kana
The Romanization of Japanese is called Rōmaji. There are three main spelling systems for Rōmaji, and the Hepburn system is the most common.
If you are referring the the calligraphic characters they use, it's called Kanji.
You can't Translate Brooke into other languages but you can spell it out in the writing systems of other languages.In Japanese it is spelled ブルック
Chinese, Japanese, and Korean are all East Asian languages that are genetically unrelated to each other. Although they share some similarities due to historical and cultural interactions, each language developed independently with distinct grammar, vocabulary, and writing systems. However, Chinese characters have been historically used in the writing systems of Japanese and Korean.
In Japanese writing, Kanji, there are just over 1900 in general use. By the time you leave high school you have learn them all. You do start in grade 1 learning a few and progressively work you way through them.
The Japanese writing was based on China's characters :)